Showing posts with label James McNeish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James McNeish. Show all posts

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Sicily in Music and Song - James McNeish 1960 recordings



Sicily in Music and Song
recordings from 1960 by James McNeish
Argo DA 30 - P.1965




Side A

A1 Tarantella (Catania province) 1'50
A2 La vò - Lullaby (Catania) 2'52
A3 Stornello (Catania province) 2'37
A4 Tarantellina (Enna province) 0'32
A5 C'era 'na volta (Trapani) 0'58
A6 Ballad of Giuliano 3'53
A7 Dungeon Song (Palermo) 2'18
A8 Lullaby (Trapani province) 2'05
A9 La nova moda di li fimmini 2'08
A10 Easter wailing (Caltanissetta) 3'02
A11 Romance (Catania province) 1'31


Side B


B12 Ballad of Turiddu Carnevale (Palermo province) 1'38
B13 Pastoral (Agrigento province) 2'18
B14 Tarantella (Ragusa province) 1'51
B15 Sonnu Sonnuzu (Caltanissetta province) 1'50
B16 Stornello (Enna province) 2'54
B17 Prayer song (Palermo province) 0'45
B18 Mazurka (Ragusa province) 1'31
B19 Nennia (Enna) 2'12
B20 Drum sonata (Agrigento province) 2'33
B21 Stornello a botte (Enna province) 2'25
B22 Scialoma (Trapani province) 1'18


Here is another of the James McNeish field recordings full of good music and atmosphere. I think that some tracks on this record are very precious in deed. I like the big variation covering many different styles and traditions, only thing that is sad is that so many tracks are so short. That does not make the record less important it only makes you want to hear more. I think the Easter wailing track, the Pastorale and the Prayer song are wonderful glimpses allowing a real time travel. The Tarantellina with the jews harp and the Nennia is also very good listening.

Hope you enjoy this one! I will post another one of his recordings with music from Greece, but a little later. Too much other music waiting in line... We will see what comes first, and maybe someone else has some more of the McNeish recordings they could pass along to me so I could put them together with the others...




Saturday, March 26, 2011

Music from Czechoslovakia - Recordings by James McNeish


Music from Czechoslovakia - [Folk Music of Czechoslovakia]
Recordings by James McNeish
Argo Record Co. - DA 89 - P.1970



Side A


A1 Song — Dance 3'43
A2 Poison Ballad 1'00
A3 Children's Song - The Burning Sun 2'15
A4 Landler 1'08
A5 Love Song 2'05
A6 Drinking Song 0'56
A7 Bagpipe Solo 1'07
A8 Hollar Song 1'30
A9 Lullaby, Chodsko area 0'50
A10 Love Song 1'23
A11 Murder Ballad, 3'02
A12 Cimbalom Solo 3'38
A13 Nature Song 1'33


Side B


B1 Wedding Song 1'15
B2 Lullaby for an Illegitimate Child 1'43
B3 Bandit Song 1'50
B4 Bagpipe Song 0'45
B5 Song Without Words 1'58
B6 Polka 2'45
B7 Hollar Duet 1'07
B8 Bagpipe Song 0'44
B9 Field Song 3'12
B10 Bagpipe Solo 4'35
B11 Orphan's Lullaby 2'18
B12 Wedding Song 1'38



IT is said that Karel Plicka, the, indefatigable collector of Slovak melodies, amassed in his lifetime some fifty thousand texts and tunes. When it is considered that Slovakia in size, and population roughly represents only a third of Czechoslovakia the statement even if exaggerated, gives some idea of the musical resource of that country. Had Plicka devoted himself to Moravia or Bohemia instead, his rewards would probably have been as great.

Plicka's energies were at their height between the wars. And today?

In a corner of southern Moravia, to take one sparsely populated valley on the Velička River where I recorded in 1966, there are still two hundred individual Folk musicians of repute. In southern Bohemia young girls will stroll into the country, exchanging songs all day, and return at night without having repeated themselves

In mid-Slovakia, marooned in a rundown school under the Tatra Mountains, I encountered a young schoolteacher who began singing work songs at nine in the evening and was still singing, far from exhausted, at three the following morning.

A portion of the music of these three areas is reflected on this disc: a highly personal choice resulting from two postwar field trips. In these areas alone there is a complex of regional expression, enriched by western and eastern cultures, sufficient to occupy a team of ethno-musicologists for a lifetime. From the sleeve notes by James McNeish...


James McNeish

These field recordings were made in 1960 and 1966 by New Zealander James McNeish. McNeish is an interesting character. Born in 1931 in New Zealand, he did a BA in modern languages, taught a bit, then, in 1958, worked his passage to Europe on a Norwegian freighter.

He became a fireman at Joan Littlewood’s Theatre Workshop and, after a spell teaching in south London, set off around Europe in 1959 with his first wife, recording folk music. He recorded in Poland, Czechoslovakia and Hungary before landing in Sicily in 1960, where he stayed two to three years.

Back in London (1963 or 1964), he turned the Greece and Sicily recordings into two series of radio programmes for the BBC’s Third Programme. Two people from Argo sat in on one of the programme recording sessions, “got excited by what they heard and commissioned a disc”, he remembers.

The Sicily recordings – Sicily in Music and Song (Argo DA 30) – and this album got a simultaneous release in the UK and the USA in early 1965. A later Argo LP of McNeish recordings – Folk Music of Czechoslovakia – was one of reviewer Brian Rust’s albums of the year in The Gramophone in 1970. "A model of its kind, instructive and delightful."

quoted from Folkcatalogues excellent blog some more to read about McNeish and Argo there!


I choose this one because it fitted with the previous post. I will post the Greece, and Sicily albums mentioned in the text a little later but first there are still some more Deben Bhattachariya coming...